Of course, Friday and Saturday night will be finished off at Moto-i (Fringe Central) and Sunday we’ve got the Fringe closing night party at the Varsity Theater. All fringe staff, volunteers, audience members and friends are welcome at both.

For those of you who already expressed interest in coming to see a fringe show with me, and for those who have not yet expressed this but are keeping it bottled up inside for whatever reason, here are my potential (not set completely in stone) plans for these first couple days of fringe:

Break for house managing; i’ll be facilitating box office goodyness over at Cult Status Gallery for the BYOV show The 612 by Rogues Gallery Arts. Sounds really interesting. Come buy a ticket from me; see 4 short plays plus a gallery show of visual art!

Phew! I did it! I mean, I planned it. Now all that’s left is to go enjoy. Sunday I won’t be seeing shows because I will be working as a house manager at the Playwright’s Center all day long. Food donations gladly accepted. Hint hint nudge nudge.

August has arrived. The fringeyness has begun to take over the world of Robyn. Here’s 15 shows I’m looking forward to seeing this year; you can click on all the titles to go to each show’s page on the minnesota fringe website (create an account and add them to your schedule, then come back and read the rest of the list!).

Live Action Set. Directed by Sara Richardson. Starring Noah Bremer, Hans Hauge, Kimberly Richardson, Dario Tangelson, and Emily Zimmer. A BYOV (Bring-your-own-venue) in the Mill City Museum’s train shed. The potential for this not to be good is completely inconceivable to me. I’m not sure what the venue capacity is and would suggest getting their early, they have often sold out in the past. Worth the wait in line.

A split-bill dance show with choreography by Christopher Watson and Jeffrey Peterson. I was on the radio in December highlighting Peterson’s fringe piece last year “Thinkingaview” in the MPR Art Hounds Best of 2010 episodes. And he even included that in the show description! So cute! Anyway, this sounds like it’ll be another fascinating performance:

“Stand Up” unabashedly unravels female stereotypes and the objectification of women. Just as “Thinkingaview” provided an avenue to unravel social constructs through the creative use of repetition, “Stand Up” does the same, this time flipping the feminist movement on its head, dissecting our cultural tendencies regarding politics, beauty, power, marriage, child rearing and reproductive rights.

You might remember me raving about this show last year. It’s back! And I think I will go see it again. It was that good. An adorable old librarian finds a book that has been returned when it is 123 years overdue, and becomes obsessed with solving the mystery. It also received the best reviews of any show at last year’s fringe and sold out it’s last show despite being a last minute addition with no pre-festival marketing. Must-see!!!

Another returning hit from last year, by Amy Salloway. Abso-frickin’-hilarious. She likes to rewrite things over and over so it’ll probably be a little different from last year; I know she’s got a different guy playing “Dean” – the unitarian universalist obsessed with buffy the vampire slayer who has given 90% of his heart to another woman who is in a “lesbian phase.” Anyway, I’m sure it’ll be very funny. I hope she still does the squeaky sound effects…go see it to find out what I mean.

Rob Callahan + Allegra Lingo. Two storyteller performers create a show at the last minute when they get picked off the waiting list just a few weeks before the festival. Check out their show page for a preview. Should be, in a phrase Allegra uses all the time, awesomesauce. Or Amazeballs. Or both!

By Joking Envelope, written by Joseph Scrimshaw. Scrimshaw epitomizes Fringe in many ways. If you haven’t been to a Joking Envelope show yet, you should go so you at least know what all the buzz is all about. Generally everything they do is very, very funny.

Created by and starring Christopher Kehoe. I’ve seen his last two one-man shows at the last two Fringes and he is simply a phenomenal actor. Darkly funny, which is my favorite type of funny. And hey, they are giving away nine $20 gift cards to the Republic on opening night!

By Comedy Suitcase. Includes the OTHER Scrimshaw, Joshua, and Levi Weinhagen. In 2009 they did the show The Harty Boys in The Case of the Limping Platypus. Which was really cute and funny. I’m running out of descriptor words other than “funny” so I should probably rap up this list pretty soon…

I’ve actually only seen Tom Reed at improv at Brave New Workshop/Huge Theater and as a host of this year’s 10 Second Film Festival. When he did Parry Hotter and the Half Drunk Twins he was in a crazy tiny venue that was ridiculously sold out the entire festival, and I wasn’t quite as intrigued by last year’s Bite me Twilight since I haven’t read the books or seen the movies. But he’s hilarious! And he’s doing a parody of ALL of the Disney princess movies. So this is definitely a must-see. Another get-there-early one.

I went to college with this dude, Ben Egerman, and now he makes post-apocalyptic comedy shows, this one involving a wolf puppet with a monocle and funny charts drawn on cardboard. Previously created “Please Don’t Kill Me Killler Robots.” Which also involved funny things drawn on cardboard. Me likey.

Ben San Del creates clever stuff and brings together a great looking cast. And I adore their promo images.

Alright, I’m done for now. That’s 15 shows that are 94.28% guaranteed to be either funny, beautiful, inspiring, or intriguing. I also thoroughly recommend perusing the schedule either online or in print and picking a show that you know nothing about, but that sounds interesting, and taking a chance. Discovering something new is the best part of the Fringe. Now…Who’s coming fringing with me?*

*To see shows you’ll need the $4 festival admission button, and regular tickets are $12 per show. 5-show and 10-show punchcards are available which give you a discount of $2 off per ticket; great way to see a bunch of shows yourself or bring a group! Psst: The views expressed here are my own and are not perpetuated from nor endorsed by the Minnesota Fringe Festival.

(I can’t seem to get wordpress to let me embed this. GRRR! Maybe it just isn’t working in the preview & will kick in when I publish…hmm nope) Anyway, Umm yeah, so…this is weird. Which is why it is so, so awesomely fringeworthy. In the fringe-for-all 3 minute preview, the cardboard elephant got karate-chopped in half in a demonstration of a feat of unusual strength. I gave it 4 out of 5 kitties* on my “do I want to see this” scorecard.

More Minnesota Fringe Festival news and recommendations coming soon! I already have a freakishly long list to divulge. Will try to make it more concise so as not to overwhelm those who are not quite as obsessed dedicated as me.

* (The MN Fringe review system is based on a rating of 1-5 “kitties”, which are far superior to “stars” in their ability to communicate the reviewer’s experience. And they’re way cuter.)

P.S. Our Placemaking project at the Friendly Streets Initiative Block Parties is going well! My group is presenting our pLaYMaGinAtiON sPaCE project at one more block party on August 19th. The other artist’s projects are also very fun and worth checking out. I’ve posted some photos of the shenanigans so far which can be found over here on my facebook page.

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